Drawing on a global database of fossil fuel production restrictions, this article explores what policies look like in practice, where they are emerging, and what their strengths and limitations tell us about the politics of managing decline.
The International Monetary Fund and World Bank are about to revise their main tool for assessing how much low-income countries can borrow, and on what terms. Our experts unpack what’s at stake and why the reform matters for sustainable development.
This guide supports organizations that promote sustainable market-based initiatives to strengthen how they listen to, work with, and learn from producers across different contexts.
For countries already carrying heavy debt loads, rising energy and food prices due to the conflict in the Middle East are now threatening to tip fragile macroeconomic positions over the edge. Fernando Morra and Anahí Wiedenbrüg ask who will pay the price and why the answer goes beyond the energy bill.
The fourth edition of the Trade + Sustainability Hub happened in Yaoundé, Cameroon, alongside the Fourteenth WTO Ministerial Conference (MC14). The Hub convened thought leaders from governments, business, and civil society to explore how trade policy can evolve to meet today’s global challenges and drive meaningful progress on sustainable development.